In the slides, I am tentatively announcing some very recent (and not yet fully written up) work of Ben Green and myself establishing the Gowers inverse conjecture in finite fields in the special case when the function f is a bounded degree polynomial (this is a case which already has some theoretical computer science applications). I hope to expand upon this in a future post. But I will describe here a neat trick I learned at the conference (from the FOCS submission of Bogdanov and Viola) which uses majority voting to enhance a large number of small independent correlations into a much stronger single correlation. This application of majority voting is widespread in computer science (and, of course, in real-world democracies), but I had not previously been aware of its utility to the type of structure/randomness problems I am interested in (in particular, it seems to significantly simplify some of the arguments in the proof of my result with Ben mentioned above); thanks to this conference, I now know to add majority voting to my “toolbox”.

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